The city of New Orleans can now recover after Hurricane Katrina hit nearly five years ago. The fans in the French Quarter this year actually looked like their everyday lives were still affected as they were all smiles and loaded on Jesters and beer.

Now the debacle New Orleans faces is: who will claim the rights to the beloved "Who Dat" phrase, which hopefully the seven parties fighting over ownership don't sue me for the use of it in the title.

Maybe in another five years, the Saints will win another Super Bowl so the city can recover from that argument; either that, or the hangover every citizen will face after tonight.

So Drew Brees is the Super Bowl MVP and savior of New Orleans. His 32-of-39 performance was surely attributed in his selection.

Perhaps it was also attributed to the fact that the Indianapolis pass rush and the feared Dwight Freeney were stuck in bear hugs the entire game.

In fact, it wasn't Freeney's ankle that altered his performance and rendered him nearly useless in the game; it was something that a cortisone shot couldn't fix.

As seen in the photo above, Freeney experienced the closest form of bromance on the gridiron by getting held and hugged close to every play.

Freeney wasn't the only one, however, who was effected by the no-calls. My favorite part was the no-call pass interference on Jonathan Vilma where he climbed Dallas Clark's back to knock away a pass over the middle.

What was more interesting was the Zapruder film of a replay that was shown, excluding all the frames where contact was made.

The game quickly turned into a one-sided prison beating. Numerous times the Saints threw cheap shots at the Colts players. Yet, I'm not shocked that the officiating crew overlooked them.

In fact, the Saints were only penalized three times. Twice on false starts, and once on a unnecessary roughness penalty towards the "who cares, the game's over" part of the game.

Penalties were enforced on the Colts at just the right times to halt potential drives and big plays from happening, more so in the second half.

Then there was the two-point conversion call. Whatever the rule was stating that it should be overturned, the referee sure didn't know what it was or why.

Through his sputtering and stuttering in a loss for words, I almost believed he was going to justify it for a $15k bonus.

Throughout the past several years, it has become more evident that there is a certain amount of bias implemented into games by the NFL. After all, it is a business and why not do what it takes to achieve more ratings and make more money?